What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“When the Association was once and upon a sudden offered to me to sign, I declined signing it.”
Joseph Lyon, a farmer “living at the White Plains in Westchester County” in New York, wanted to get back into the good graces of his community. He had offended many people when he refused to sign “the Association,” most likely the “General Association, agreed to, and subscribed by the Freeholders, Freemen, and Inhabitants” of New York. The New York Provincial Congress devised the General Association upon learning of the battles at Lexington and Concord in April 1775. Delegates then disseminated the General Association throughout the colony, expecting supporters of the American cause to sign it. In doing so, subscribers pledged to “adopt and endeavour to carry into Execution, whatever Measures may be recommended by the Continental Congress; or resolved upon by our Provincial Convention, for the Purpose of preserving our Constitution, and opposing he Execution of the several arbitrary, and oppressive Acts of the British Parliament; until a Reconciliation between Great-Britain and America, on Constitutional Principles … can be obtained.”
Lyon did not sign and apparently others in White Plains made their displeasure with that decision known to him. The situation eventually prompted the farmer to take out an advertisement in the February 15, 1776, edition of the New-York Journal. He attempted to explain what caused his error in judgment: “having spent my life in hard labour, and absence from the means of political knowledge, when the Association was once and upon a sudden offered to me to sign, I declined signing it.” In other words, he did not regularly follow politics, so he did not understand the significance of the General Association when it was first presented to him. Furthermore, he had not been allowed time to consider the document thrust at him “upon a sudden.” When colonizers in Massachusetts published advertisements apologizing for signing an address to Thomas Hutchinson when the governor returned to England, many also claimed that they had not had time to consider the implications. In both instances, those asking forgiveness claimed that events moved too quickly so they should not be faulted for making a poor decision. Lyon gave the matter “further consideration” and then “applied to the Chairman or one of the Committee for leave to sign” the General Association, but by then “the paper was gone to New-York.”
Since Lyon could not sign his name alongside others on the original document, he resorted to a newspaper advertisement. “I therefore take this method,” he proclaimed, “to declare, that in my heart I am a sincere friend to the Liberties of America, my native country.” In addition, “all the worldly comfort I expect for myself and my children, is connected with the happiness of America.” To demonstrate that point, “I have not done, nor been concerned in any thing in opposition [to] the present measures of America, in defence of its Liberties, nor ever will.” Although he could not sign the General Association, Lyon made his own pledge to “comply with the recommendations and orders of the Congress and Committees in all things, as far as my conscience will permit.” He may have hoped that others did not pay too much attention to that caveat. Lyon concluded by stating that he was “sixty six years of age, and diligently employed in farming and grinding” so he hoped “this will afford full satisfaction to my countrymen. He asked for sympathy for an old man who knew far more about working a farm and operating a mill than anything involving politics. Humbling himself in the public prints, Lyon believed, offered a means for restoring his standing in his community.























